Japan’s space agency (Jaxa) has released incredible images from its robot rovers of the asteroid Ryugu. I know that I go all squealy over NASA and space pictures, but this is amazing. It is difficult to get one’s mind around the fact that we are looking at the surface of an asteroid that has been moving through space since before the advent of mankind.

The rovers were released by the “mothership”, Hayabusa 2 after a three-and-a-half-year journey. The rovers actually hop in the low gravity to get around.

Image copyright JAXAImage copyright JAXA

The asteroid is 900m wide and is believed to have been around since the early stages of the galaxy.

11 thoughts on “Meet Ryugu: Close Up And Personal”

It’s hard to imagine the eons of total silence on that rock. No wind. No sound. It formed and cooled and remained frozen and unchanging in a way that a planet with atmosphere never could. That particular formation has looked exactly the same for billions of years.

I’m with you L.E.M.
Though it’s a shame that it had to be you.
The mother ship is just a blip
From your trip made for two.
I’m with you boys, so please employ just a little extra care.
It’s on my mind I’m left behind
When I should have been there.
Walking with you.

At the Big Bang all matter/atoms were H, some HE and a little Lithium. Anything heavier is created when a Supernova blows and squeezes the H and He together to create all the other atoms up to Uranium, every second a supernova explodes in the observable universe, every 50 yrs in the Milky Way. And the radiation pulse is powerful enough to fry all life on a planet light years away. The supernova that supplied the solar system with the heavy stuff is estimated to have occurred 5-6 billion yrs ago no further than 10 light years away. Nature’s awesome